Princess Cruises to appear in fly-on-the-wall documentary

Princess Cruises to appear in fly-on-the-wall documentaryPrincess Cruises is to appear in a primetime four-part fly-on-the-wall documentary on ITV.

The cruise line has revealed that camera crews were given behind-the-scenes access to Royal Princess after it was launched last year by the Duchess of Cambridge.

The results will appear in four episodes of The Cruise Ship, though broadcast dates have yet to be announced.

Paul Ludlow, Princess Cruises managing director for the UK & Europe, said the line was given no editorial control over the series.

But he believes the results will provide a boost for the cruise industry in general, and Princess sales in particular.

“This is the single biggest thing happening for cruise this year as far as I’m concerned,” he said.

“This idea has been in the pipeline for a while now and it quickly became something very exciting.”

He added: “It will show the cruise industry in a really positive light and demonstrate the incredible experiences our guests have on board. Our crew are the stars of the show and it reflects how hard they work.”

The programme allows Princess to once again capitalise on the excitement generated when the duchess helped christen the ship, according to Ludlow.

“There was a great feeling in the industry when the Duchess of Cambridge launched Royal Princess and this will bring back a lot of that feeling,” he said.

“This will only have a positive effect for us as a brand and for bookings.”

Last year, BBC2 broadcast The Cruise: A Life at Sea, a series focusing on the chaplain on Fred Olsen Cruise Lines’ Balmoral. It drew criticism that it reinforced perceptions that cruises were for older people, but the line’s Nathan Philpot reported “over £1 million in sales” in the three days after the first show.

Bahamas courting cruise passengers with Balmoral Beach in Nassau

Bahamas courting cruise passengers with Balmoral Beach in Nassau

By Tom Stieghorst
In the latest attempt to make a Caribbean port more attractive to return visitors, a group of investors in the Bahamas has redeveloped the former Blackbeard’s Cay and renamed it, providing more for cruise passengers to do when stopping in Nassau.

The attraction, which reopened last month as Balmoral Beach, is one response to the cruise industry’s call for destinations in the Caribbean and the Bahamas to refresh their appeal.

About $5 million has been invested to improve the beach on Balmoral, according to Bahamian press reports. The operator of the resort, Samir Andrawos, was unavailable for comment.

The redeveloped area, which is being used by Carnival Cruise Lines, includes a white-sand beach with lounge chairs and umbrellas, four bars, an indoor restaurant, cabanas and a gift shop.

Other cruise lines have fostered similar day excursions. Royal Caribbean International, for example, last year partnered with Jamaica’s best-known beer to open Red Stripe Beach near the port of Falmouth, where its Oasis and Allure of the Seas ships dock.

Such beaches provide a less expensive option for passengers than excursions to luxury hotels or waterpark resorts. An excursion to Red Stripe Beach, which has a bar and grill, showers and chairs for rent, costs $24.

Balmoral Beach occupies part of an island off Cable Beach, the other half of which is the site of Sandals Royal Bahamian Resort’s offshore island. Blackbeard’s Cay, which had a stingray attraction, closed in 2012, and Andrawos was hired to improve it.

Andrawos runs the destination management company St. Maarten Sightseeing Tours.

Balmoral Beach is hosting excursions from Carnival, which charges $49.99 per adult. It is reached via a launch from the cruise ship pier in downtown Nassau.

Reviews posted on Carnival’s website have praised the new beach and attentive staff but panned the boat ride as lengthy and crowded.

Balmoral costs less than a beach excursion to Atlantis, the mega-resort on Paradise Island, which is priced at $99 including lunch. Guests can pay for Balmoral products and services with the Carnival Sign and Sail card.

In Jamaica, Royal developed a beach that is exclusive to its guests, about 10 minutes by bus from the cruise port. It leased the property and entered a branding partnership with Red Stripe to develop it.

It has fewer facilities than Balmoral Beach, but it also provides a less expensive beach option than, for example, a more inclusive beach excursion to the Hilton Rose Hall Resort near Falmouth, which costs $139.

In Nassau, some merchants along downtown’s Bay Street fear that the Balmoral development will eventually hurt their businesses because passengers can visit the site without even leaving the cruise ship piers.

David Johnson, director general of the Bahamas Tourism Ministry, said that Carnival provides about 1.9 million of Nassau’s 4 million annual cruise ship arrivals. He also noted that those visitor numbers are up from 500,000 in 1995.

“Nassau is now the world’s largest transit cruise port,” Johnson asserted.

As the number of cruise visitors to Nassau grows, they need more things to do, Johnson said. In addition to the private development at Balmoral, the government is making improvements on Bay Street, he said.

“We’re really on a path to completely revamping what we know as downtown Nassau,” Johnson said.

Among other changes to Nassau, a new permanent Straw Market was opened last year to replace the one that burned a decade ago. Pompey Square, a green space in front of the Hilton British Colonial, was dedicated in June and has opened up Bay Street and made it more pedestrian-friendly, Johnson said.

Cargo traffic has been rerouted off Bay Street to Arawak Island, and there is a 10-year plan to extend a boardwalk east from the cruise pier almost to the bridge to Paradise Island, he said.

There are also plans to redo Festival Place, where cruise passengers enter Nassau, to increase its capacity from 5,000 to 25,000 a day, Johnson said.

Quakes Spark Volcano Alert in Canaries

Quakes Spark Volcano Alert in Canaries

The Spanish government have issued a yellow alert following an increased level of persistent seismic activity, described as an “earthquake swarm”. The epicentre is on the island of El Hierro – the smallest of the Canary Islands, to the west of Tenerife and Gran Canaria. The island, popular with tourists, has seen over 8,000 tremors in two months, 150 since yesterday and experts fear an eruption could happen imminently.

Around 10,000 people live on the 108-square mile island and 53 people have been evacuated from their homes so far following landslide fears. However, a mass emergency evacuation is now possible with the army on standby for helping out in such an event and residents preparing to flee.

The British Foreign Office advises: “The local government authorities have raised the risk level of a volcanic eruption from green to yellow and taken preventative measures in case of a volcanic disruption, deploying extra resources from the military and emergency services to the island. Local authorities are also on stand-by to effect an evacuation should this become necessary.”

Fortunately, no cruise ships are due to call at El Hierro, but there are several scheduled to call at neighbouring islands over the next few weeks.

Ships visiting include Independence of the Seas, Adventure of the Seas and Mariner of the Seas, Silver Spirit, Ventura, Queen Mary 2, Costa Deliziosa, MSC Melody, HAL’s Ryndam and Boudicca, Black Watch and Balmoral.

A volcanic eruption has not taken place on any of the Canary Islands since Las Palmas in 1971 but an expert has warned that an eruption on El Hierro could take place in, “days, weeks or months,” according to Tom Worden of the Mail Online. Juan Carlos Carrecedo said, “There is a ball of magma rising to the surface producing a series of ruptures which generate seismic activity. We don’t know if that ball of magma will break through the crust and cause an eruption.”

A spokeswoman for Royal Caribbean said: “We are currently monitoring the volcanic activity on El Hierro to ensure guests enjoy a safe and comfortable cruise. At this time, Independence of the Seas and Adventure of the Seas are still scheduled to make all of their ports of calls. The safety of our guests and crew is always our foremost concern.”